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Major Shipping Firm Maersk Raises Profit Outlook As Shipping Volume Grows

Maersk
Container ship Edith Maersk crosses the Suez Canal at East Port Said Port, 120 km (75 miles) northeast of Cairo, October 5, 2012.
REUTERS/Stringer

Danish shipping and oil conglomerate AP Moeller Maersk raised its full-year profit guidance on Tuesday after quarterly results were boosted by a strong performance by its container shipping business.

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It also said it would return about $1.0 billion (749 million euros) to shareholders over the next year through a share-buyback programme.

The group, which has about 15 percent of the global container market through Maersk Line, said profit was expected to be $4.5 billion this year rather than the previously stated $4.0 billion after stripping out discontinued operations, impairment losses and divestment gains.

Maersk Line, which accounts for about 40 percent of group revenue, reported a 6.6 percent volume increase and bolstered profits through cost cutting initiatives that included operating ships at a slower speed.

Operating profit from the container business rose by a quarter to $547 million as higher volumes and lower costs offset a fall in the average revenue per unit.

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Freight rates have remained depressed since global shipping companies expanded their capacity just as international trade was hit by the financial crisis.

To reduce costs, Maersk announced last month an alliance with shipping company MSC on some of the world's busiest cargo routes after China scuppered a planned tie-up between the two companies and CMA.

The alliance will create a system similar to code-sharing agreements among airlines, allowing the companies to put cargo on each others vessels.

The group's net profit in the second quarter nearly tripled to $2.304 billion from $856 million, reflecting a $2.8 billion gain from selling its stake in Danish retailer Dansk Supermarked, but also a $1.7 billion writedown on its Brazilian oil assets.

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Analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires had expected net profit to reach $2.1 billion.

The raised outlook was "greater than expected," Sydbank analyst Jacob Pedersen told Danish news agency Ritzau.

"The share buyback will make investors say that now Maersk has really trained its focus on the shareholders," he added.

Shares in Maersk were 4.7 percent higher in midday trading on the Copenhagen stock market, where the main index was up by one percent.

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Read the original article on AFP. Copyright 2014. Follow AFP on Twitter.
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